The Benefits of Mainstreaming

Of the surveys that SCHOOL BUS FLEET publishes, one that’s particularly interesting to me is the Special-Needs Survey (see pg. 28 in the February 2011 issue, view the digital edition here or visit the research section on our website).

On average over the past five years, respondents reported that 36.7 percent of their special-needs students are mainstreamed (i.e., ride regular-ed routes), with this year having the lowest figure (30 percent).

I have a disability (cerebral palsy), but I have not been given special treatment throughout my life and I’ve appreciated that. In my opinion, when you have a disability, it boosts your self-esteem to be treated as “normally” as possible.

It seems, then, that it would benefit special-needs students for operations to practice mainstreaming whenever possible.

I realize that there are many factors that can affect whether a special-needs student rides a bus with his or her general-education peers. For instance, perhaps that student’s disability is so severe that it’s safest for him or her to ride on a special-needs route.

Launi Schmutz, director of transportation at Washington County School District in St. George, Utah, says that parents also play a large role in this, and often want to help in making transportation decisions.

“What’s best for the student needs to be looked at in the IEP. Sometimes that’s putting them with their [special-needs] peers, sometimes it isn’t. It’s definitely more cost-effective to transport them on a regular-ed bus,” Schmutz adds.

Cost-effective service
Schmutz estimates that the cost to transport students at her operation on regular routes is about $248 per student, whereas the cost for transporting students on special-needs routes is about $974 per student.

Although what’s best for the student should be the priority in determining whether he or she can be mainstreamed, Schmutz says cost should be considered, especially in today’s economic climate.

Schmutz attends IEP meetings and asks how special-needs students behave during lunch, recess and in between classes (which she considers similar to the environment on a school bus), and how they interact with others to help establish whether they could be mainstreamed.

However, she emphasizes, “Every decision is made individually with consideration of each student’s safety and welfare.”

Schmutz also maintains an open line of communication with the individuals who discuss with parents the transportation options for their children.

“You have to have buy-in,” she says. “Patience is key.” (Schmutz says it once took a year for the parents of a student with a mild disability to allow him to ride on a regular-ed route.)

Students learn self-advocacy
Mainstreaming can also aid in students’ development. Jean Zimmerman, supervisor of occupational and physical therapy for the Palm Beach County School District in West Palm Beach, Fla., says it will help special-education children learn how to respond in the “real world.”

“It will be a prelude to learning to ride a public city bus later in life,” she says. “They’re going to learn self-advocacy.”

She adds that a “buddy system” — wherein a regular-ed student sits and talks with a special-needs student — could help the student adjust to riding a regular route.

“I also think that prior to the special-education student riding the bus, it would be beneficial to inform the other kids that he or she may be a little different, but should be welcomed by everyone,” she says.

— Kelly Roher
Managing Editor
kelly.roher@bobit.com
Print | posted on Friday, February 25, 2011 12:11 PM

Comments

 re: The Benefits of Mainstreaming

left by John Fahey at 2/28/2011 8:31 AM
Kudos to Ms. Roher for sharing her personal story with us. It is for reasons just as this that our work is so important. At the Buffalo schools, we practiced the policy that "a bus is a bus" and "a child is a child" to great success. Budget concerns are important but they are secondary to the need to do the right thing for all the children under our care.

 re: The Benefits of Mainstreaming

left by Earl McMillen at 2/28/2011 8:46 AM
Hi Kelly: I fully agree with Launi, in that most Students with any form of disability, do NOT want Special Attention drawn to their problems. They would much rather blend in with everyone else, than be singled out.
We are all Educator's not Pamper's

# re: The Benefits of Mainstreaming

left by jkraemer at 2/28/2011 10:28 AM
I agree, mainstream when possible and stop treating disabilities as something less or something fragile unless actually fragile. Over twenty years mostly mainstreaming have found most spec-ed assigned to a mainstream bus as conduct capable as reg-ed, when that is what is expected. Mollycoddling either harms their actual skill level or gives excuse to act out. One experience included a spec-ed child with apparently some form of moderate autism. He near always spoke in one-word sentences, always sat by himself and always boarded the bus first -- mollycoddled to death by the school. On a crowded bus insisted he sit with at least one other student and that he be a gentleman and let at least one person board before he did. For two-weeks that middle school age child ran home crying. He must have had incredible parents because I never heard a word back about that. Finally he integrated with the other kids, acquired several friends and now boards behind many students most days, and he sits with up to three students, although three to a seat is still uncomfortable for him and avoided when possible. So often found this to be the case with spec-ed, treat these like spec-ed and they will accommodate while some will manipulate. Treat these like reg-ed and these will try very hard to become more like reg-ed, as best they can. Too often the school or the parent or both treat this class as second class or special class. These are more like us than realized with simply a handicap that is more visible and obvious than the handicaps in the rest of us can hide in ourselves. Much better in my opinion to treat every student like one of us rather than like one of them.

# re: The Benefits of Mainstreaming

left by jkraemer at 2/28/2011 11:53 AM
Suppose ought to also mention that the middle school routes involved in the comment above are maintained safe, calm (civil) environments. Some spec-ed, just like some reg-ed, can not manage themselves in a chaotic or otherwise unruly environment. It is far worse in such environments for some spec-ed conditions. For mainstreaming to work with even reg-ed, especially at the middle school level, the bus driver must have effective violence prevention (and bully prevention) training to help make the school bus environment a safer, calmer environment. No training - no containment - unruly rules!


Next, would not myself recommend singeling out any child in comment to the group as different, the only issue I have with this article. Certainly not unless introducing to the group every child that rides the bus as may be different, because every child is in one fashion or another, phyically obvious, or hidden somewhere within -- is diferent.

 re: The Benefits of Mainstreaming

left by Kelly Roher at 3/1/2011 9:03 AM
Thanks for the feedback, everyone.

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